Ricardo Geromel is the managing partner of the Fort Lauderdale Strikers. In his journey to disrupt the beautiful game, his main goals are to win championships and make the Strikers a global reference in innovation. Former Strikers players include George Best, Gerd Muller, Gordon Banks, Elias Figueroa, Nene Cubillas, Ray Hudson and other soccer legends.
Ricardo co-wrote a cover story of Forbes Magazine, featuring an interview with Dilma Rousseff, Brazil's president.
The globetrotter has worked in five continents in different sectors: as agricultural commodities trader for Noble Group, Asia's largest diversified commodities trading company, in Hong Kong, Switzerland, Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay, and Uruguay. Ricardo also worked as project manager in Guinea Conakry for Bolloré Group, a French conglomerate that operates the most extensive integrated logistics network in Africa. Ricardo has also worked in the soccer industry in Beijing, China. Ricardo has been writing for Forbes since July 2011.
Fluent in five languages, Ricardo holds a a Masters in Management from ESCP Europe, Paris, and a bachelor’s degree in business management from Fairleigh Dickinson University, New Jersey.
Tips and stories ideas are always welcome. Find Ricardo in twitter @ricardogeromel

Forbes Top 10 Billionaire Cities - Moscow Beats New York Again

Last time New York held the crown as the billionaire capital of the world was in 2009.

New York and Dallas are lone U.S. entries among the top 10, which has 5 Asian cities.

Moscow has held onto its title as the billionaire capital of the world. This is the fourth time in the past five years that Russia’s capital stays ahead of New York on top of our list of billionaire haunts – those cities that are the primary homes to the most billionaires. Eighty-four of the world’s richest, worth a total of over $366 billion, call Russia’s most populous city home. New York City continues to rank second, with 62 billionaires worth $280 billion. London and Hong Kong tie for third place, with 43 billionaires each.

Last time New York held the crown as the billionaire capital of the world was in 2009, when the U.S. had five cities in the top 10: New York, Chicago, San Francisco, Dallas and Los Angeles. This year, only two American cities make the top: New York and Dallas, home to 18 billionaires and tied in the last position with Paris. Even though 2012 was the year that Facebook launched its IPO, San Francisco is out of the top 10 mainly because many billionaires live near the metropolitan area. For instance, 10 are in Palo Alto alone.

Hong Kong retains its title as the most popular city among billionaires in Asia, with 43 billionaires. Beijing knocked out San Francisco and is back to the top 10 most popular residences for billionaires. China’s capital is home to 21 billionaires, 6 more than last year. Mumbai and Seoul are other Asian cities included in the top 10.

The 37 billionaires living in Istanbul, where Europe and Asia collide, are the poorest among those in the top 10 billionaire cities. The average billionaire in the only city sitting across two continents is worth $1.7 billion, two times less than the average fortune of a billionaire living in London, for instance.

France’s capital is the place with the highest average net worth among billionaires. The average billionaire living in Paris is worth $6.81 billion, an astonishing $2.2 billion more than the average billionaire in any other city in the world.

The world’s richest man, Carlos Slim, and 98 other billionaires are from Latin America. However, only one city in the region makes the top 10: Sao Paulo, with 26 billionaires, seven more than last year. In fact, Brazil’s financial center is home to more billionaires than any other city in the entire Southern Hemisphere. Astonishingly, the average fortune of a billionaires living in Sao Paulo is $4.6 billion, the world’s second largest, only behind Paris.

The biggest news of the top 10 billionaire cities is not at the top but at the bottom. In the last place, with 18 billionaires and tied with Dallas, is Paris, which was not part of the top 10 billionaire cities last year. It has surprisingly joined the rank, despite recent international headlines suggesting that wealthy people were leaving France because of its hefty taxes on the rich. There are five more billionaires with primary residence in “the city of light” than last year but, in full disclosure, most of those billionaires control large private fortunes that we heretofore had not pinned down. No one has moved to Paris of late and Bernard Arnault, the world’s 10th richest with a net worth of $29 billion, requested Belgian citizenship last year but denied reports that the main reason was related to the country’s tax regime. At the end of last year, famous French actor Gerard Depardieu, who is not a billionaire, has become a Russian citizen claiming, “I leave after paying 85 percent of my revenue in 2012.”

One of the most emblematic cases of changes of citizenship involving billionaires is that of Facebook co-founder Eduardo Saverin, who renounced his United States citizenship in 2011 days before the Facebook’s IPO and drew accusations of tax evasion. His response: “My decision to expatriate was based solely on my interest in working and living in Singapore, where I have been since 2009.” Currently, there are 14 billionaires claiming their primary residence is in Singapore.

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